Back in the day, New York City and its environs was the epicenter of
hip-hop, both culturally and commercially. East Coast rappers determined
what rap music should sound like, and set the gold standard that rappers
from other regions had to try to match. By the early 21st century, however,
things done changed. East Coast rappers, once used to setting the pace, now
find themselves having to catch up to the styles of rappers from other area
codes. So-called "real hip-hop" seems to carry less and less weight each
year. Listeners are more interested in rappers who have style and attidude
rather than lyrical skills. Hardcore hip-hop doesn't sell a million
downloads. No one wants a ringtone of battle rap.

While New York rappers like A$AP Rocky are making hip-hop that is less
rooted in classic East Coast rap, artists like Phace are still holding the
flame for the kind of hard beats and tough rhymes that have been a staple
of NYC and New Jersey for decades. The Brick City native has just
re-released his album "Phlozart" for free, providing the listener with
sixteen tracks of grimey rap like they used to make back in the day.

Phace has a nasally flow similar to Ghostface Killah or Action Bronson, but
his style is more straight-forward: he raps about how he will demolish any
other rappers in no uncertain terms. What makes him more notable than your
average tough-guy rapper is that he has the mic skills to back up his
threats. On "Hardbody" he raps:

"If you cowards want beef then you won't survive
[...]
I'm nice with this rapping shit
We go together like gat and click
Get a fattened lip
Just for acting slick
Get your asses kicked
So bad you wish it was your face
Take off them glasses bitch"

Braggadoccio rap can get old quick in the hands of a lesser MC, but Phace
keeps things clever and interesting, He provides some impressive verbal
gymnastics at the same time he is giving his rivals a lyrical beatdown. He
also mixes things up, getting romantic on "Soldier Girl," and opening up on
"For the Record." These songs show that there is more to his persona than
being a badass, which makes him and the album more likable as a result.

The album is primarly produced by Tru Mentillz, who takes the time-tested
approach of flipping samples over hard-hitting drums. It may not be
original or ground-breaking, but it sounds nice. Custodian of Record
provides a driving beat on "Get It In," Chamber provides some stripped-down
drums on "Hardbody," and Speshall sets up a dark Wu-worthy beat on
"Somebody." Phace is backed on the mic by a roster of MCs, including
Scoob-Ru, Gentum, Agonyze, Daniel Joseph, Sol Zalez, and Dark Forces Squad.
All of them manage to hold their own on the mic without crowding or
outshining Phace.

Like all 16-track mixtapes, "Phlozart" is a bit too much of a good thing.
Not all of the songs totally connect. Phace seems to have difficulty coming
up with good hooks: both "Soldier Girl" and "Who Got the Flow" go south
because of repetitive hooks that don't work. The album can also get too
serious for its own good, another side-effect of having so many tracks.
Those criticisms aside, however, "Phlozart" is a solid entry of raw East
Coast rap. If you are looking for hip-hop grounded in fat beats and vicious
lyricism, Phace has got you covered.